DOHA (Reuters) - Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad told
a summit of Gulf Arab heads of state on Monday that Tehran
wanted to create an economic cooperation bloc and a joint
security pact with them to promote peace and prosperity.

He warned the Gulf leaders that any security problem in one
state would affect all countries. Iran is at loggerheads with
the United States over its nuclear programme, which the West
says is to make a nuclear bomb but Iran says is for energy
purposes.

Washington has not ruled out the use of force if
negotiation fails. In the two-day summit's opening speech,
Qatar's ruler Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani said the meeting was
taking place amid "serious threats" to the region's prosperity
and security.

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"We welcome peace and complete security without outside
influence," Ahmadinejad told the heads of the U.S.-allied
member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council in Doha, Qatar.

"Any security problem that could happen in one country will
have a negative effect on the security of all countries," he
said in the televised speech, in which he referred to the
region as the Persian, not Arabian, Gulf.

GCC members Saudi Arabia, Oman, the United Arab Emirates,
Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar share Western concerns about Iran's
nuclear programme and some have maritime border disputes with
the Islamic Republic.

Ahmadinejad made no mention of his country's nuclear plans,
or a Saudi proposal last month to defuse the standoff with the
West by supplying Iran with enriched uranium.

However, in a bid to increase ties with the Gulf,
Ahmadinejad offered to share Iran's expertise in a range of
fields, including "energy and the new technologies." Iran has
in the past offered to help the Gulf with nuclear knowhow.

Iran regularly calls for a security cooperation pact with
Gulf Arab states as the best way of securing the region and
ridding it of U.S. forces, a plan Gulf Arabs have ignored.

ECONOMIC COOPERATION

Iranian officials said this was the first time an Iranian
president had been invited to a GCC summit. Ahmadinejad's
economic proposals included free trade with Iran's Gulf
neighbors, and joint investments in the energy sector.

Iran could also offer water and natural gas to its
neighbors, he said. The Islamic republic signed an agreement to
supply Bahrain with gas last month.

The United Arab Emirates has a long-running row with Iran
over the sovereignty of three islands in the Gulf. Kuwait is
also trying to resolve a maritime border dispute with the
Islamic Republic blocking the development of a gas field.

Ahmadinejad, who regularly rails against the United States,
also said of his trip to Qatar: "It seems a new chapter has
been opened in the relations between the Persian Gulf States."